This commit adds new binary target called "denort".
It is a "lite" version of "deno" binary that can only execute
code embedded inside the binary itself.
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Merging multiple runs isn't quite right because we
rely on a 0 count to signal that a block hasn't been called.
Other tools like c8 expect this to be true as-well so we
need to do our best to merge coverage files rather
than duplicating them.
The child process kept running and printing "hello" to stdout.
This commit also removes the dependency on reqwest and instead
switches to the re-export from the fetch crate.
Brings back commit 1a2e7741c3.
This commit adds back "/json/list" endpoint to
inspector server which was erroneously removed
during server rewrite.
Co-authored-by: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
This commit does major refactor of "Worker" and "WebWorker",
in order to decouple them from "ProgramState" and "Flags".
The main points of interest are "create_main_worker()" and
"create_web_worker_callback()" functions which are responsible
for creating "Worker" and "WebWorker" in CLI context.
As a result it is now possible to factor out common "runtime"
functionality into a separate crate.
This commit disables source mapping of errors
for standalone binaries. Since applying source
maps relies on using file fetcher infrastructure
it's not feasible to use it for standalone binaries
that are not supposed to use that infrastructure.
This commit makes the file watcher continue to work even if module
resolution fails at the initial attempt, allowing us to execute `run`
or `bundle` subcommand when a script has invalid syntax. In such
cases, the watcher observes a single file that is specified as an
command line argument.
Fixes panic occurring in worker when "self.close()" is called
at the top level, ie. worker shuts down while
module evaluation promise hasn't yet resolved.
This commit adds support for "--watch" flag for "bundle"
and "fmt" subcommands.
In addition to this, it refactors "run --watch" command so that
module resolution will occur every time the file watcher detects
file addition/deletion, which allows the watcher to observe a file
that is newly added to the dependency as well.